particular, the insurance company, is its solvency.
Solvency is determined by the ability of an enterprise to
repay its liabilities. An insurance company is considered to
be solvent if its total assets exceed its long-term and short-
term liabilities. To describe the state of the subject from the
standpoint of reliability, we use analytical indicators that
characterize the solvency of the insurer, the dynamics and
structure of its own funds, capital adequacy, own funds
liabilities of the insurer, liquidity of assets.
To assess the financial and property status requires
information that can be obtained from the balance sheet,
which contains information about assets, liabilities and
equity of the enterprise [3, p. 167—172]. The balance sheet
of the insurer can be considered liquid, and the insurance
company itself solvent, if when comparing grouped assets
and liabilities it turns out that the assets are sufficient to
cover liabilities the insurer. If there are not enough assets,
the insurer is considered in solvent. That is why we have
subdivided the insurer’s assets depending on the degree
of liquidity, ie the speed of their conversionin to cash.
This division makes it possible to propose an integrated
liquidityratio (or integrated solvency) for both financial
activities for financial results, and for insurance activity.
Deserves for note that liquidity is a prerequisite for a more
general characteristic of solvency and is the insurer’s ability
to sell assets quickly and raise money to pay its obligations.
That is, the liquidity of the balance sheet involves the use of
funds only from internal sources. The unsatisfactory state
of liquidity of the insurer will be evidenced by the fact that
its need for funds exceeds their actual income. Liquidity
analysis is performed by comparing the amount of current
liabilities with the availability of liquid funds. Among other
indicators used in our study, a special place is occupied by
coefficients that show how independent the insurer is from
external sources of funding — the coefficient of general
autonomy and the coefficient of insurance autonomy. As
a rule, lenders prefer insurance companies with greater
financial autonomy, as they are more likely to repay debts
at their own expense. The larger the share of equity, the
greater the insurer’s ability to overcome adverse situations
of financial security of insurance activities.
Given the specifics of insurance companies, it is advis-
able to divide the solvency ratios into those related to the
overall financial results, and those that correspond to the
solvency in the field of insurance (Fig. 2).
In general, the structure of the balance sheet can be
considered satisfactory when there is a relative balance
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